2,785 research outputs found
An AER handshake-less modular infrastructure PCB with x8 2.5Gbps LVDS serial links
Nowadays spike-based brain processing emulation is
taking off. Several EU and others worldwide projects are
demonstrating this, like SpiNNaker, BrainScaleS, FACETS, or
NeuroGrid. The larger the brain process emulation on silicon is,
the higher the communication performance of the hosting
platforms has to be. Many times the bottleneck of these system
implementations is not on the performance inside a chip or a
board, but in the communication between boards. This paper
describes a novel modular Address-Event-Representation (AER)
FPGA-based (Spartan6) infrastructure PCB (the AER-Node
board) with 2.5Gbps LVDS high speed serial links over SATA
cables that offers a peak performance of 32-bit 62.5Meps (Mega
events per second) on board-to-board communications. The
board allows back compatibility with parallel AER devices
supporting up to x2 28-bit parallel data with asynchronous
handshake. These boards also allow modular expansion
functionality through several daughter boards. The paper is
focused on describing in detail the LVDS serial interface and
presenting its performance.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación TEC2009-10639-C04-02/01Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TEC2012-37868-C04-02/01Junta de Andalucía TIC-6091Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad PRI-PIMCHI-2011-076
MorphIC: A 65-nm 738k-Synapse/mm Quad-Core Binary-Weight Digital Neuromorphic Processor with Stochastic Spike-Driven Online Learning
Recent trends in the field of neural network accelerators investigate weight
quantization as a means to increase the resource- and power-efficiency of
hardware devices. As full on-chip weight storage is necessary to avoid the high
energy cost of off-chip memory accesses, memory reduction requirements for
weight storage pushed toward the use of binary weights, which were demonstrated
to have a limited accuracy reduction on many applications when
quantization-aware training techniques are used. In parallel, spiking neural
network (SNN) architectures are explored to further reduce power when
processing sparse event-based data streams, while on-chip spike-based online
learning appears as a key feature for applications constrained in power and
resources during the training phase. However, designing power- and
area-efficient spiking neural networks still requires the development of
specific techniques in order to leverage on-chip online learning on binary
weights without compromising the synapse density. In this work, we demonstrate
MorphIC, a quad-core binary-weight digital neuromorphic processor embedding a
stochastic version of the spike-driven synaptic plasticity (S-SDSP) learning
rule and a hierarchical routing fabric for large-scale chip interconnection.
The MorphIC SNN processor embeds a total of 2k leaky integrate-and-fire (LIF)
neurons and more than two million plastic synapses for an active silicon area
of 2.86mm in 65nm CMOS, achieving a high density of 738k synapses/mm.
MorphIC demonstrates an order-of-magnitude improvement in the area-accuracy
tradeoff on the MNIST classification task compared to previously-proposed SNNs,
while having no penalty in the energy-accuracy tradeoff.Comment: This document is the paper as accepted for publication in the IEEE
Transactions on Biomedical Circuits and Systems journal (2019), the
fully-edited paper is available at
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/876400
A Binaural Neuromorphic Auditory Sensor for FPGA: A Spike Signal Processing Approach
This paper presents a new architecture, design
flow, and field-programmable gate array (FPGA) implementation
analysis of a neuromorphic binaural auditory sensor, designed
completely in the spike domain. Unlike digital cochleae that
decompose audio signals using classical digital signal processing
techniques, the model presented in this paper processes information
directly encoded as spikes using pulse frequency modulation
and provides a set of frequency-decomposed audio information
using an address-event representation interface. In this case,
a systematic approach to design led to a generic process for
building, tuning, and implementing audio frequency decomposers
with different features, facilitating synthesis with custom features.
This allows researchers to implement their own parameterized
neuromorphic auditory systems in a low-cost FPGA in order to
study the audio processing and learning activity that takes place
in the brain. In this paper, we present a 64-channel binaural
neuromorphic auditory system implemented in a Virtex-5 FPGA
using a commercial development board. The system was excited
with a diverse set of audio signals in order to analyze its response
and characterize its features. The neuromorphic auditory system
response times and frequencies are reported. The experimental
results of the proposed system implementation with 64-channel
stereo are: a frequency range between 9.6 Hz and 14.6 kHz
(adjustable), a maximum output event rate of 2.19 Mevents/s,
a power consumption of 29.7 mW, the slices requirements
of 11 141, and a system clock frequency of 27 MHz.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TEC2012-37868-C04-02Junta de Andalucía P12-TIC-130
Musical notes classification with Neuromorphic Auditory System using FPGA and a Convolutional Spiking Network
In this paper, we explore the capabilities of a sound
classification system that combines both a novel FPGA cochlear
model implementation and a bio-inspired technique based on a
trained convolutional spiking network. The neuromorphic
auditory system that is used in this work produces a form of
representation that is analogous to the spike outputs of the
biological cochlea. The auditory system has been developed using
a set of spike-based processing building blocks in the frequency
domain. They form a set of band pass filters in the spike-domain
that splits the audio information in 128 frequency channels, 64
for each of two audio sources. Address Event Representation
(AER) is used to communicate the auditory system with the
convolutional spiking network. A layer of convolutional spiking
network is developed and trained on a computer with the ability
to detect two kinds of sound: artificial pure tones in the presence
of white noise and electronic musical notes. After the training
process, the presented system is able to distinguish the different
sounds in real-time, even in the presence of white noise.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TEC2012-37868-C04-0
Event-based Vision: A Survey
Event cameras are bio-inspired sensors that differ from conventional frame
cameras: Instead of capturing images at a fixed rate, they asynchronously
measure per-pixel brightness changes, and output a stream of events that encode
the time, location and sign of the brightness changes. Event cameras offer
attractive properties compared to traditional cameras: high temporal resolution
(in the order of microseconds), very high dynamic range (140 dB vs. 60 dB), low
power consumption, and high pixel bandwidth (on the order of kHz) resulting in
reduced motion blur. Hence, event cameras have a large potential for robotics
and computer vision in challenging scenarios for traditional cameras, such as
low-latency, high speed, and high dynamic range. However, novel methods are
required to process the unconventional output of these sensors in order to
unlock their potential. This paper provides a comprehensive overview of the
emerging field of event-based vision, with a focus on the applications and the
algorithms developed to unlock the outstanding properties of event cameras. We
present event cameras from their working principle, the actual sensors that are
available and the tasks that they have been used for, from low-level vision
(feature detection and tracking, optic flow, etc.) to high-level vision
(reconstruction, segmentation, recognition). We also discuss the techniques
developed to process events, including learning-based techniques, as well as
specialized processors for these novel sensors, such as spiking neural
networks. Additionally, we highlight the challenges that remain to be tackled
and the opportunities that lie ahead in the search for a more efficient,
bio-inspired way for machines to perceive and interact with the world
A scalable multi-core architecture with heterogeneous memory structures for Dynamic Neuromorphic Asynchronous Processors (DYNAPs)
Neuromorphic computing systems comprise networks of neurons that use
asynchronous events for both computation and communication. This type of
representation offers several advantages in terms of bandwidth and power
consumption in neuromorphic electronic systems. However, managing the traffic
of asynchronous events in large scale systems is a daunting task, both in terms
of circuit complexity and memory requirements. Here we present a novel routing
methodology that employs both hierarchical and mesh routing strategies and
combines heterogeneous memory structures for minimizing both memory
requirements and latency, while maximizing programming flexibility to support a
wide range of event-based neural network architectures, through parameter
configuration. We validated the proposed scheme in a prototype multi-core
neuromorphic processor chip that employs hybrid analog/digital circuits for
emulating synapse and neuron dynamics together with asynchronous digital
circuits for managing the address-event traffic. We present a theoretical
analysis of the proposed connectivity scheme, describe the methods and circuits
used to implement such scheme, and characterize the prototype chip. Finally, we
demonstrate the use of the neuromorphic processor with a convolutional neural
network for the real-time classification of visual symbols being flashed to a
dynamic vision sensor (DVS) at high speed.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figure
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